It starts with the story of Arthur Clive Pinner, a Home Boy shipped to Canada in 1909, desperate for some kind of refuge. Flash forward ninety years: the w ancient Art Pinner sits in his wheelchair, vaguely aware of the intrigues and stresses of twenty-first century Sky Falls.The real-life dramas swirling around Art make up the bulk of this collection of thirteen stories about a group of young people coming of age in a small town in rthern Ontario. These are stories in which teenagers come to terms with their sexuality, with private shame and public tragedy, with emerging love, with heroism-and with the inexplicable spirits and small miracles that are at work in their lives.
Diana Aspin was born in 1947 in Blackpool, England. She has spent most of her adult life in Canada and divides her time between her year-round home tucked into a cliff on the Lake of Bays, Muskoka, and her apartment in Brampton, Ontario. While raising three children-John, James and Emma-she received a Social Service diploma and worked in this field as a counselor until she decided to write full time.